This month's blog entry highlights the design process for a outdoor courtyard programming exercise for a large Southern California Office Campus. With only a week to create concepts and no digital files (CAD bases) to use, I had to use beautifully hand-drawn as-built drawings for my base drawing. The materials and programs used for this process were ink pens, color pencils, perspective charts, and Adobe Photoshop and InDesign. Step One: Site Approach [left]. Site design began with bubble diagrams to show program and outdoor theme adjacencies and how people would circulate throughout. The studies were quickly drawn with ink pen (black Pentel Sign pen in this exercise) over the as-built drawing to scale on trace paper. Color pencil was used to help differentiate the programmatic spaces and possible themes. Bubble diagrams are important to help anchor the essence of the design intent, and are helpful during presentations to keep things at a level of pure focus. Step Two: Site Plan Diagram [right]. With the as-built drawing as a screened underlay and bubble diagram approach setting the tone, I used Adobe Illustrator to create paved areas and inserted water features, trees, seating areas, berms, and other design elements that refine the initial design thinking for the scheme. Layer management is important in order to control opacities, transparencies, and overall graphic readability. This is also effective when creating process slides in a powerpoint presentation by turning on / off layers, i.e. paving layer, tree layer, site furnishings, and using them as talking points. Step Three: Sketch Vignette [left]. Using the two-point perspective grids from the birds-eye vantage point, I created quick sketch vignettes with ink pen on trace and colored pencils to convey the design intent from the site plan diagram. Originally I had intended to photo-montage the building facades that frame the courtyard but felt that isolating the courtyard was more effective so the client was not distracted by the existing architecture. Once you develop a system of drawing typologies, the subsequent options can go quite fast. It is also important and a good rule of thumb to name the schemes which also helps frame the design approach. The seven options shown below were all drawn in one day and formatted in Adobe InDesign. The drawings were oriented so that all schemes could be evaluated and compared within one board, but could also be broken out per scheme to insert into a powerpoint / pdf presentation format. I hope you found this blog helpful and are able to use this technique in your current and future projects. Please let me know if you have any questions about this process. Happy drawing! -BrianSee More

A two day hand-on graphic workshop to include proper drawing attitude, over 30 principles of loose graphics, quick and easy way to set up 1 and 2 points perspective and rendered them with pencil, ink, colored pencils and markers. Learning how to draw people, trees and cars will also be included.See More